Cornish MP calls for government re-think on 10pm curfew for pubs

Derek Thomas also wants a minimum unit price for alcohol to be introduced

Author: Sarah YeomanPublished 17th Oct 2020

The MP for St Ives and West Cornwall is calling for the government to introduce a minimum unit price for alcohol.

Derek Thomas has delivered a speech in parliament during a debate on coronavirus restrictions.

He says acting quickly to introduce a minimum unit price would have multiple health and economic benefits, as well as helping pubs recover from the Covid-19 restrictions.

Mr Thomas said he also wants to see a government re-think on the 10pm curfew for pubs and bars.

Mr Thomas said: “We have told pubs they need to close at 10 o’clock but we have done absolutely nothing to curtail the sale of cheap alcohol in supermarkets.

“Once again, we are seeing the supermarkets doing everything they can to maximise their take on the back of the coronavirus.

“What the Government could do right now to reassure pubs …. is to curtail cheap alcohol sales in supermarkets, which would not only improve people’s health but give the pubs a chance to recover.

“If the Government is not prepared to change the curfew, they must be prepared to give pubs a fair chance.”

Derek Thomas, MP for St Ives and West Cornwall

He said introducing the minimum unit price for alcohol “would reduce the drinking culture … and improve health outcomes, which would improve people’s chances of surviving coronavirus and increase the Treasury’s income.”

Mr Thomas contributed to the Alcohol Harm Commission Inquiry which released its report this week detailing the scale of harm directly attributed to alcohol.

The report shows that there are 80 alcohol-related deaths every day while 33 people are diagnosed with an alcohol-related cancer every day.

Sales of alcohol provides ÂŁ12bn to the Treasury but cost society up to ÂŁ52bn each year.

In Scotland, a minimum unit price of 50p per unit was introduced in 2018; earlier this year the Government said there were “no plans for the introduction of MUP in England” although it would continue to monitor the progress of MUP in Scotland and consider the evidence of its impact.